The tardigrade as an emerging model organism for systems neuroscience
Lyons AM, Kato S
arXiv
2025
Abstract
We present the case for developing the tardigrade (Hypsibius exemplaris) into a model organism for systems neuroscience. These microscopic, transparent animals (~300-500 microns) are among the smallest known to possess both limbs (eight) and eyes (two), with a nervous system of only a few hundred neurons organized into a multi-lobed brain, ventral nerve cord, and a series of ganglia along the body. Despite their neuroanatomical simplicity, tardigrades exhibit complex behaviors, including multi-limbed walking gaits, individual limb grasping, phototaxis, and transitions between active and dormant states. These behaviors position tardigrades as a uniquely powerful system for addressing certain fundamental questions in systems neuroscience, such as: How do nervous systems coordinate multi-limbed behaviors? How are top-down and bottom-up motor control systems integrated? How is stereovision-guided navigation implemented? What mechanisms underlie neural resilience and recovery during environmental stress? We review current knowledge of tardigrade neuroanatomy, behavior, and genomics, and we identify opportunities and challenges for leveraging their unique biology. We propose developing essential neuroscientific tools for tardigrades, including genetic engineering and live neuroimaging, alongside behavioral assays linking neural activity to outputs. Leveraging their evolutionary ties to Caenorhabditis elegans and Drosophila melanogaster, we can adapt existing toolkits to accelerate tardigrade research - providing a bridge between simpler invertebrate systems and more complex neural architectures.
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